Anglo-Saxon

The collection comprises approximately 1000 items from Anglo-Saxon England (5th-10th centuries AD) all overwhelmingly from the original donation of Joseph Mayer in 1867. Many of these were excavated in the late 18th century by the Reverend Bryan Faussett (1720-1776) and include several exceptional objects, such as the Kingston Brooch, the largest known Anglo-Saxon composite brooch ever discovered. The collection has great research potential, and is of national importance.

Faussett Collection

The jewel of Joseph Mayer's Anglo-Saxon antiquities is the Faussett collection which is one of the finest groups of Kentish cemetery material ever excavated. Faussett was an early pioneering excavator who between 1760 and 1763 excavated in the region of 750 Anglo-Saxon burials. The collection consists of material from Faussett's excavations in east Kent, with accompanying documents, as well as acquisitions by gift and purchase. In collaboration with the University of Oxford a web database has been compiled of all Faussett's finds, called the Novum Inventorium Sepulchrale.

Rolfe collection

William Rolfe (1779-1859) acquired a large collection of antiquities from his native east Kent. His collection was acquired by Joseph Mayer and contains finds from Canterbury St Martin's Church, Ozengell and Richborough.